Where never sun-burnt woodman came, you with her solemn strain, And teach pleas'd echo to complain. 6. With you roscs brighter bloom, Sweeter every sweet ume; Base, ungrateful, fickle, vain. 7._Then let me, sequester'd fair, To your sybil grot repair; The bournless microcosm's thine. And disappointment seems entail'd; + To your hermit-trodden seat; Where I may live at last my own, Where I at last may die unknown. 9. I spoke: she turn d her magic ray: And thus she said, or seem'd to say; And bid to social life a last farewell; From matter, brute, to man, to seraph, fire. 11. Should man through nature solitary roam, His will his sovereign, every where his home, Sec What boots through space's furthest bourns to roam? The use, the pleasure, will the toil repay. 19. Nor study only, practise what you know; Your life, your knowledge, to mankind you'owe. And freedom, Britain, still belongs to thee. Is the reward of worth, a song, or crown? The height of virtue is, to serve mankind. When memory fails, and all thy vigouris fled, * One of the accusers of Socrates. FINIS CHAPTER 1. Pago Select Sentences and Paragraphs, Narrative Pieces. Sect. 1. No rank or possessions can make the guilty mind happy, 44 2. Change of external condition often adverse to virtue, 45 3. Haman; or the misery of pride, 5. Ortogrul; or the vanity of riches, 7. The journey of a day; a picture of human life, Sect. 1. The importance of a good education, 4. Motivos to the practice of gentleness, 5. A suspicious temper the source of misery to its possessor, 68 7. Diffidence of our abilities, a mark of wisdom, 8. On the importance of order in the distribution of our time, 71 9. The dignity of virtue amidst corrupt examples, 0. The mortifications of vice greater than those of virtue, 75 12. Rank and riches afford no ground for envy, 13. Patience under provocations our interest as well as duty, 81 14. Moderation in our wishes recommended, 15. Omniscience and omnipresence of the Deity, the source of Argumentative Pieces. Eost. 1. Happiness is founded in rectitude of conduct, 2. Virtue man's highest interest, 3. The injustice of an uncharitable spirit, 4. The misfortunes of men mostly chargeable on themselves, 92 5. On disinterested friendship, 6. On the immortality of the soul, Descriptive Pieces. 2. The cataract of Niagara, in Canada, in North America, 103 3. Locke and Bayle. CHAPTER VIII . Sect. 7. Charity, 8. Prosperity is redoubled to a good man, 112 113 114 116 118 119 Pathetick Pieces. 122 123 125 ib. 127 132 Dialogues. 134 137 139 146 150 the bill for preventing the delays of justice, by claiming 156 161 Promiscuous Pieces. 165 169 170 171 174 176 178 180 nounced by Christ on his disciples, in his sermon on the 181 182 187 189 185 |